Neuronal plasticity in a case with total hemispheric lesion.

RATIONALE
The adult brain maintains the ability for reorganization or plasticity throughout life. Non-invasive techniques such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (f-MRI), Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) and magnetoencephalography could be used to show recovery of function after stroke.


OBJECTIVE
Explanation of neuronal plastisity and intra-hemisferic reorganization with functional recovery of a case who has total extensive damage on the left hemisphere. case report: Twenty-five years old female patient was admitted to our hospital with a right-sided sequel hemiparesis and homonymous hemianopia. She had right-sided paresia after an inguinal hernia operation when she was one and a half years old. On neurological examination she was speaking fluently, and cooperated on complicated comments. Motor examination revealed right-sided spastic hemiparesis predominant on distal parts and right sided visual field defect. But she was continuing her activity of daily livings without help. Her detailed neuropsycological examination revealed mild cognitive dysfunction. Cranial MRI showed total left hemisphere encephalomalasia. Right hemisphere function was noticed on task-related brain activation during voluntary movement of her right leg (she was not capable of performing right hand function tasks by herself ) on functional MRI.


CONCLUSION
Cerebral lesions in the early life can be compensated with the unaffected hemisphere by the neuronal reorganisation and a patient with complete left hemisphere lesion such as our patient can speak, maintain her life without assistance but with mild cognitive decline, compared with elderly stroke patients.


Introductıon:
Nervous system has a property to reorganize its function after a lesion or environmental change [1]. The mature stage of the CNS at the time of the insult for this reorganization is very important [2]. If a lesion occurs at the early childhood, the restoration of neurological function takes a different process from adulthood. The structural properties, location and extent of the lesion also affect the reorganization of the brain as well as the time of the insult [2].
Neuronal plasticity has been shown by many experimental studies and clinical experiences, and noninvasive techniques such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (f-MRI), transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) allow understanding of the functional adaptive changes in human beings [3][4][5]. Most of the studies about neuronal plasticity are related to stroke patients. It's amazing how cerebral networks respond to focal injury [3]. A lesion of the left hemisphere occurred during childhood rarely result in speech and language disorders [6].
We report a patient with mild motor and cognitive deficit despite a total left hemisphere lesion and we explain the function of neuronal reorganization in early stage of life.
Nervous system has a property to reorganize its function after a lesion or environmental change [1]. The mature stage of the CNS at the time of the insult for this reorganization is very important [2]. If a lesion occurs at the early childhood, the restoration of neurological function takes a different process from adulthood. The structural properties, location and extent of the lesion also is defined that developed brain reacts differently to the insults than adult brain [7]. Significant changes in the topography of the cortical somatosensory and motor maps have been demonstrated using non invasive mapping techniques as multichannel EEG, evoked potential, transcranial magnetic stimulation, functional magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography Neuroimaging studies of both adults and children have indicated that right hemisphere language lateralization is more likely to be observed early rather than late. Liegeois and et al [6] was studied on children and adolescents epilepsy patients who sustained an early lesion in the left hemisphere, they also found that perilesional or remote reorganization for language other than right hemisphere function in functional MRI , but they concluded that non-left language lateralization is more common in patients who suffer from early or developmental left hemisphere lesions than in control subjects.
Perilesional reorganization has also been observed in adults who suffered a left inferior frontal stroke and showed good language outcome [12]. The mechanism of functional recovery after CNS lesions has been tried to explain by the long term potentiation and depression, modulated by the up-down regulation of inhibitory and excitatory activity related to GABA, Ach and glutamate between other neurotransmitters [1]. Axonal and dendritic sprouting take place in animal models of lesional brain injuries, the neuronal plasticity in humans also may be related to this mechanism.
In the present case, there is an extensive damage to the left hemisphere but the clinical outcome is much better than expected. Functional MRI of the patient shows the adaptive changes of the human brain and permits the patients to live with mildly motor and cognitive dysfunctions. We could not find in the literature a lesion large enough to cause mild deficit although there is a total hemispheric damage.